Andrew Robinson threw a complete game and Luke Robinson laced five hits. Those factors were enough to propel the fourth-seeded Wildcats to a 10-2 upset of top-seeded Western Alamance.

“Might as well keep going,” said Luke Robinson, the catcher.

That’s the theme these days with the Wildcats.

Eastern Guilford (14-10) will play in a conference tournament title game in baseball for the first time since 1999 — when coach Jay White was a freshman on the school’s junior varsity team. The Wildcats go to third-seeded Eastern Alamance at 7 tonight for the final.

They reached this point by following Wednesday night’s nine-inning nipping of Williams High School with a more dominant performance. Eastern Guilford won for the second time at Western Alamance, though it came six nights after Western Alamance won on the Wildcats’ field to clinch the regular-season title.

There were few signs of that in the latest meeting.

“It’s not what I was hoping for,” Western Alamance coach Lance Huff said. “Now I’m hoping we’ll use this as a learning experience going into the (state) playoffs.”

The Warriors (20-5) will start the Class 3-A states next week with a home game. Eastern Guilford could earn a home game if it wins tonight.

Luke Robinson drove in five runs with his 5-for-5 outing against Western Alamance. His brother called it a slump-breaking effort.

Caleb Robinson, an older brother, drove in the game’s first run with a first-inning double. Luke Robinson followed with a run-scoring single.

“It wasn’t a shock,” Luke Robinson said of the outcome. “We came in with confidence.”

And that seemed to grow.

Caleb Robinson finished with three RBI and two hits, Marque Johnson supplied three hits, Ryan Hackett notched two hits and scored three runs, and Jacob Finerty and Andrew Robinson each contributed two hits.

“They hit the ball extremely well and it didn’t matter who we put up there (on the mound),” Huff said. “We found out how the other half lives because we’ve done that to teams a bunch of times.”

Andrew Robinson was on target on the mound after the Warriors broke through against him last Friday night.

“Andrew had an out pitch (this time),” White said. “He had a few off-speed pitches that he was locating better. … He stays pretty poised and we made plays behind him.”

Yet it didn’t look all that encouraging when Brock Deatherage led off the bottom of the first inning with an opposite-field home run to left-center field and then the next two Warriors reached base.

The threat ended when Hackett, the center fielder, made a diving catch of Kevin Burns’ soft liner to leave two Western Alamance runners on board.

Eastern Guilford was relentless, registering 19 hits. Losing pitcher Blake Deatherage was off the mound after the first batter of the third inning. The Wildcats scored four runs with two outs in the sixth to increase what had been a 4-1 edge.

“We definitely put more pressure on them,” White said.

Western Alamance stranded 11 runners, including eight across the first five innings. The Warriors had the lead-off batter on base in six of the innings, though they wasted lead-off doubles from Burns in the fourth and Blake Deatherage in the seventh.

Andrew Robinson was unfazed by it.

“It’s just (being) calm,” he said. “You can’t get let it get to you.”

The Warriors became stale this time against the right-hander.

“That’s the difference a day makes with this game,” Huff said.

Blake Deatherage’s two hits made him the only Western Alamance player with more than one hit. He reached base four times.